We’ve all clicked ‘I agree’ without reading the fine print. But when you’re running a business, defective terms and conditions aren’t just an oversight – they can be catastrophic.
Last summer, a facilities management company came to me in absolute panic. Let’s call them ‘CleanSpace Solutions’ (not their real name). They’d been providing commercial cleaning and maintenance services for five years with a solid reputation and dozens of corporate clients when everything went sideways.
One of their cleaning operatives accidentally damaged a sprinkler head while moving equipment in a Grade II listed office building after-hours. The resulting flood destroyed expensive IT equipment, ruined historical architectural features, and forced the building to close for six weeks of emergency repairs and restoration.
The building owner’s insurer were claiming CleanSpace for £850,000 in damages, plus consequential losses for their tenant’s business interruption.
CleanSpace’s director confidently pulled out their standard service agreement, expecting their insurance and T&Cs to handle it. But that’s when the real nightmare began.
The Problem: No robust Terms & Conditions
Their T&Cs had been copied from another cleaning company years earlier and never properly reviewed. They contained:
- A liability cap that was far too low to be reasonable (£1,000) and likely unenforceable
- No clear insurance requirements or notification procedures
- Vague provisions about “best efforts” with no defined service standards
- Nothing addressing damage to third-party property or building fabric
The result? Their liability cap was so unreasonable a court would likely strike it down entirely, leaving them exposed to the full claim. Their own insurer was also questioning coverage because the contract didn’t comply with their policy requirements.
Terms and Conditions: the three non-negotiables
After intensive negotiations with insurers, lawyers, and the claimant (and a substantial settlement), we rebuilt CleanSpace’s terms from scratch. Here are the three essential clauses that every service supplier should have properly drafted to avoid a situation like the above:
- Crystal-clear limitation of liability
This isn’t the place for ambiguity. Your T&Cs need to:
- Specify exactly what types of losses you do and do not accept liability for
- Set a clear, reasonable monetary cap (typically linked to your insurance coverage or the contract value)
- Explicitly exclude liability for indirect and consequential losses
- Carve out exclusions for matters that can’t be limited (fraud, death/personal injury, deliberate breaches)
- Ensure the clause is prominent, fair, and drafted to survive legal challenges
The lesson: A £1,000 liability cap for a company causing potential building damage isn’t just unrealistic – it’s unenforceable. Courts will throw out unreasonable limitation clauses, leaving you completely exposed. The cap must bear some relationship to the risk.
- Clear service standards and obligations
Don’t hide behind vague promises like “reasonable care” or “best efforts.” Include:
- Specific service specifications and quality standards
- Clear procedures for accessing premises and handling keys/security
- Requirements for trained, vetted staff (especially for sensitive premises)
- Protocols for reporting incidents, damage, or problems immediately
- Defined response times for different issues
The lesson: “We’ll do our best” doesn’t cut it when something goes wrong. Clear standards protect both parties by setting realistic expectations and proving you met your obligations. In CleanSpace’s case, having no protocol for immediately reporting the sprinkler damage made everything worse.
- Comprehensive insurance and indemnity provisions
This is your safety net – for both you and your client. Specify:
- Minimum insurance coverage levels for public liability and professional indemnity
- Requirement to maintain insurance throughout the contract term
- Obligation to provide proof of insurance on request
- Clear indemnities for losses caused by your negligence vs. client-caused issues
- Procedures for notifying insurers and managing claims
The lesson: Your T&Cs need to work in harmony with your insurance policy. CleanSpace’s insurer disputed coverage partly because the contract didn’t meet policy conditions. Even the best insurance is useless if your contract terms void it.
The bottom line
CleanSpace survived, but it nearly broke them – both financially and reputationally. The settlement consumed most of one year’s profit, and the stress nearly caused the director to shut down the business entirely.
Your terms and conditions aren’t just a legal formality. They’re your first line of defence when things go wrong. And in service businesses where you’re working on client premises with potential to cause damage, things will eventually go wrong.
The question is: will your T&Cs protect you, or will they crumble under pressure like CleanSpace’s cut-and-paste template?
Don’t wait for a crisis to find out.
Need your T&Cs reviewed or drafted properly? The cost of getting it right is always less than the cost of getting it wrong. Our Commercial Team is here and ready to help you get protected.